Expatriatesââ¬â¢ money gives boost to Indian economy
By Anand Kumar
CONFRONTED by economic crises in the past, the Indian government had to appeal to its citizens living abroad to rush to its rescue by repatriating funds back home. This happened in 1991, when India faced a major economic calamity with foreign exchange reserves down to one billion dollars ââ¬â barely enough to meet three weeksââ¬â¢ of imports.
India was on the verge of defaulting on its external loans and had to pledge its gold with international banks. The government asked the public sector State Bank of India (SBI), the countryââ¬â¢s largest commercial bank, to float the India Development Bonds, which fetched about $1.6 billion.
The crisis also triggered off the economic reforms programme, which 15 years later has ensured sustained high economic growth.
The government leaders also sought help of the NRIs when the next crisis hit the economy, following Indiaââ¬â¢s nuclear explosion in May 1998. Overseas Indians, attracted more by the lucrative returns rather than patriotism, pumped in $4.18 billion that year ââ¬â in SBIââ¬â¢s Resurgent India Bonds ââ¬â helping the country tide over the crisis.
Two years later, the NRIs again ploughed in $5.3 billion, subscribing to the Millennium India deposit bonds floated by the SBI. These days, Indiaââ¬â¢s foreign exchange reserves position is extremely healthy ââ¬â it adds up to $170 billion.
The NRI bank deposits make up about $32 billion of these reserves, but India does not go out of its way to lure overseas Indian deposits, as interest rates have fallen significantly. In fact, the government also allows the NRIs to take away money from India.
Recently, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), the countryââ¬â¢s central bank, allowed the NRIs to repatriate up to one million dollars a year from the sale of properties. Earlier, there was a 10-year lock-in period during which the funds were to be kept within the country.
The move to allow the NRIs to repatriate proceeds from the sale of properties is expected to result in increased inflow of the NRI funds into real estate sector. The 10-year lock-in period had discouraged the NRIs from investing in the sector as there was a fear that their investments would be diluted over a 10-year period because of the depreciation of rupee.
With exit routes opened up, the NRI investments into lucrative property sector are expected to surge. Of the 20 million NRIs living in over a 100 countries across the globe, a majority is unlikely to ever return to India. It is only the five million-odd Indians living in the Gulf who have plans to return home.
The Gulf-based NRIs invest in properties in India that are meant for their own use. But most Indians in North America, Europe and the Asia-Pacific region have no plans to resettle in their country. Still, many of them want to invest in a property that could be rented out, or sold after a few years for a hefty profit.
The NRI remittances into the country continue to be high. Last week, the RBI disclosed that the NRIs remitted $24.6 billion into India, half of which was parked in bank deposits or invested in the stock markets or properties.
According to a recent World Bank report, India, Mexico and China are the largest recipients of remittances from their citizens living abroad. This year, global remittance flows are expected to reach $268 billion, more than double the level of $132 billion in 2000. Developing countries would account for $200 billion of these remittances.
But the authorities in India have been monitoring inflow of the NRI funds, fearing that part of it might be laundered funds, or used for speculative purposes in the capital markets. The RBI is learnt to have discovered that a significant portion of the NRI and portfolio investments into the country emanate from tax havens.
The RBI is also monitoring the flow of funds through foreign direct investment (FDI) route, suspecting that some of it might be the NRI money which ultimately ends up in capital markets. The RBI has been seeking a ban on the use of participatory notes (PNs). Many foreign institutional investors (FIIs) ââ¬â there are nearly a thousand of them registered with the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), the capital markets regulator ââ¬â operate on behalf of clients whose identity remains unknown on the basis of the PNs.
Both the RBI and the SEBI have been asked by the federal government to keep a watch on money coming from tax havens, to prevent money laundering. Intelligence agencies have warned the government in the past that underworld and ill-gotten money that is sent abroad, is laundered and brought in legally through tax havens and the PN route.
The black money that is laundered in this manner then flows into the capital markets, fuelling speculation. Such ââ¬Ëhot moneyââ¬â¢ can be pulled out anytime ââ¬â as happened last week when indices tumbled on the exchanges ââ¬â hurting genuine investors.
Many FIIs operate out of Mauritius with which India has a double taxation avoidance treaty, to avoid payment of capital gains tax. Mauritius does not impose such a tax, so companies registered there and doing business in India also do not have pay to the tax.
About 85 per cent of foreign fund inflows last year were through the PN route. Authorities have suspected that a significant portion of it could be illegal wealth that was originally taken out of India. The RBI figures for 2004-05 reveal that Mauritius based entities accounted for $820 million of the total foreign direct investments of $2.32 billion. Mauritius has agreed to tighten up the tax residence rules for foreigners.
The 20 million-odd NRIs living around the world are believed to have a total annual income of $250 billion. About 200,000 NRIs living in the US are millionaires, and in Britain, there are several NRI billionaires and millionaires.
And like many expatriates from Asia, they save substantial amounts. Conservative estimates place the global NRI savings at $75 billion a year.
Indian banks, both private and public sector ones, have been eyeing these funds, hoping to get a large chunk of it. The NRI remittance business is one of the most competitive, and even international banks account for a major slice of the flow of funds.
But with interest rates in India having dipped, the NRIs are losing interest in traditional products like fixed deposits and savings accounts. About 15 years ago, banks were offering lucrative returns to the NRIs. In the case of a non-repatriable deposit, it was over 25 per cent per annum, while hard currency deposits fetched nearly 15 per cent.
Banks that are active in the NRI funds are now going all out to woo them with other products, including mutual funds, insurance policies, and capital market products. These three segments of the Indian financial services sector are doing extremely well, with brisk, double-digit growth rates.
Mutual fund assets in India have soared by 60 per cent over the past 12 months. The Association of Mutual Funds in India says assets under management now add up to $76.5 billion. There are 30 mutual funds in India, but 15 other asset management companies have sought approval to float funds.
Similarly, the life insurance industry has seen an amazing 162 per cent growth in premium income. Not surprising then that several other international players, besides a dozen Indian banks, are eager to enter the buoyant sector.
There was just one life insurance company ââ¬â the government-owned Life Insurance Corporation (LIC) ââ¬â before the industry was opened up in 2000. Today, there are 16 (including the big daddy of them all, the LIC), yet India remains one of the most under-insured countries in the world.
The overseas Indians today dabble in the stock markets, invest in mutual funds, and even buy insurance policies. Bank deposits may have lost their charm, thanks to lower interest rates, but the booming financial services sector in India continues to offer them ample opportunities to make a killing.
http://www.dawn.com/2006/12/18/ebr8.htm
By Anand Kumar
CONFRONTED by economic crises in the past, the Indian government had to appeal to its citizens living abroad to rush to its rescue by repatriating funds back home. This happened in 1991, when India faced a major economic calamity with foreign exchange reserves down to one billion dollars ââ¬â barely enough to meet three weeksââ¬â¢ of imports.
India was on the verge of defaulting on its external loans and had to pledge its gold with international banks. The government asked the public sector State Bank of India (SBI), the countryââ¬â¢s largest commercial bank, to float the India Development Bonds, which fetched about $1.6 billion.
The crisis also triggered off the economic reforms programme, which 15 years later has ensured sustained high economic growth.
The government leaders also sought help of the NRIs when the next crisis hit the economy, following Indiaââ¬â¢s nuclear explosion in May 1998. Overseas Indians, attracted more by the lucrative returns rather than patriotism, pumped in $4.18 billion that year ââ¬â in SBIââ¬â¢s Resurgent India Bonds ââ¬â helping the country tide over the crisis.
Two years later, the NRIs again ploughed in $5.3 billion, subscribing to the Millennium India deposit bonds floated by the SBI. These days, Indiaââ¬â¢s foreign exchange reserves position is extremely healthy ââ¬â it adds up to $170 billion.
The NRI bank deposits make up about $32 billion of these reserves, but India does not go out of its way to lure overseas Indian deposits, as interest rates have fallen significantly. In fact, the government also allows the NRIs to take away money from India.
Recently, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), the countryââ¬â¢s central bank, allowed the NRIs to repatriate up to one million dollars a year from the sale of properties. Earlier, there was a 10-year lock-in period during which the funds were to be kept within the country.
The move to allow the NRIs to repatriate proceeds from the sale of properties is expected to result in increased inflow of the NRI funds into real estate sector. The 10-year lock-in period had discouraged the NRIs from investing in the sector as there was a fear that their investments would be diluted over a 10-year period because of the depreciation of rupee.
With exit routes opened up, the NRI investments into lucrative property sector are expected to surge. Of the 20 million NRIs living in over a 100 countries across the globe, a majority is unlikely to ever return to India. It is only the five million-odd Indians living in the Gulf who have plans to return home.
The Gulf-based NRIs invest in properties in India that are meant for their own use. But most Indians in North America, Europe and the Asia-Pacific region have no plans to resettle in their country. Still, many of them want to invest in a property that could be rented out, or sold after a few years for a hefty profit.
The NRI remittances into the country continue to be high. Last week, the RBI disclosed that the NRIs remitted $24.6 billion into India, half of which was parked in bank deposits or invested in the stock markets or properties.
According to a recent World Bank report, India, Mexico and China are the largest recipients of remittances from their citizens living abroad. This year, global remittance flows are expected to reach $268 billion, more than double the level of $132 billion in 2000. Developing countries would account for $200 billion of these remittances.
But the authorities in India have been monitoring inflow of the NRI funds, fearing that part of it might be laundered funds, or used for speculative purposes in the capital markets. The RBI is learnt to have discovered that a significant portion of the NRI and portfolio investments into the country emanate from tax havens.
The RBI is also monitoring the flow of funds through foreign direct investment (FDI) route, suspecting that some of it might be the NRI money which ultimately ends up in capital markets. The RBI has been seeking a ban on the use of participatory notes (PNs). Many foreign institutional investors (FIIs) ââ¬â there are nearly a thousand of them registered with the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), the capital markets regulator ââ¬â operate on behalf of clients whose identity remains unknown on the basis of the PNs.
Both the RBI and the SEBI have been asked by the federal government to keep a watch on money coming from tax havens, to prevent money laundering. Intelligence agencies have warned the government in the past that underworld and ill-gotten money that is sent abroad, is laundered and brought in legally through tax havens and the PN route.
The black money that is laundered in this manner then flows into the capital markets, fuelling speculation. Such ââ¬Ëhot moneyââ¬â¢ can be pulled out anytime ââ¬â as happened last week when indices tumbled on the exchanges ââ¬â hurting genuine investors.
Many FIIs operate out of Mauritius with which India has a double taxation avoidance treaty, to avoid payment of capital gains tax. Mauritius does not impose such a tax, so companies registered there and doing business in India also do not have pay to the tax.
About 85 per cent of foreign fund inflows last year were through the PN route. Authorities have suspected that a significant portion of it could be illegal wealth that was originally taken out of India. The RBI figures for 2004-05 reveal that Mauritius based entities accounted for $820 million of the total foreign direct investments of $2.32 billion. Mauritius has agreed to tighten up the tax residence rules for foreigners.
The 20 million-odd NRIs living around the world are believed to have a total annual income of $250 billion. About 200,000 NRIs living in the US are millionaires, and in Britain, there are several NRI billionaires and millionaires.
And like many expatriates from Asia, they save substantial amounts. Conservative estimates place the global NRI savings at $75 billion a year.
Indian banks, both private and public sector ones, have been eyeing these funds, hoping to get a large chunk of it. The NRI remittance business is one of the most competitive, and even international banks account for a major slice of the flow of funds.
But with interest rates in India having dipped, the NRIs are losing interest in traditional products like fixed deposits and savings accounts. About 15 years ago, banks were offering lucrative returns to the NRIs. In the case of a non-repatriable deposit, it was over 25 per cent per annum, while hard currency deposits fetched nearly 15 per cent.
Banks that are active in the NRI funds are now going all out to woo them with other products, including mutual funds, insurance policies, and capital market products. These three segments of the Indian financial services sector are doing extremely well, with brisk, double-digit growth rates.
Mutual fund assets in India have soared by 60 per cent over the past 12 months. The Association of Mutual Funds in India says assets under management now add up to $76.5 billion. There are 30 mutual funds in India, but 15 other asset management companies have sought approval to float funds.
Similarly, the life insurance industry has seen an amazing 162 per cent growth in premium income. Not surprising then that several other international players, besides a dozen Indian banks, are eager to enter the buoyant sector.
There was just one life insurance company ââ¬â the government-owned Life Insurance Corporation (LIC) ââ¬â before the industry was opened up in 2000. Today, there are 16 (including the big daddy of them all, the LIC), yet India remains one of the most under-insured countries in the world.
The overseas Indians today dabble in the stock markets, invest in mutual funds, and even buy insurance policies. Bank deposits may have lost their charm, thanks to lower interest rates, but the booming financial services sector in India continues to offer them ample opportunities to make a killing.
http://www.dawn.com/2006/12/18/ebr8.htm